To be the devil's advocate (or at least a media historian) is what we are describing a difference in kind or in scale? Most of us on air-l are probably aware of the use of the phone (landline, then mobile) and fax for organizing...and I recall reading about examples of the use of audio cassettes and letters for organizing (though obviously on a different timeline). So as I see it there are three fairly obvious things the internet brings that are different than media before it in this regard: One is the internet's relative instantaneity, another its reach to so many people, and another is the inherent "copy-ability" of internet communication (e.g., the ease of forwarding, posting). Which of these matters most, or are they all equal? And what I'd like to know more than that: Is there something else, something about the internet as a medium, that makes it more than a faster/broader medium in comparison to what has come before it? Thanks, Sj At 6:28 AM -0500 2/23/03, Michael Gurstein wrote:
Pace Gina and others... I think the article below provides some extremely useful insight into the role that the Internet played, is playing and will play in the variety of political transformations that are taking place.
The demonstrations were, we should note, occuring on day 1.5 of a war that hadn't yet happened and yet according to CNN who referred us to their website for confirmation, there were significant "anti" activities in some 603 (not sure where the 3 came from) communities across the globe.
Some observations: * pre-Internet, we would probably not have known (certainly not in a timely fashion) about 90% of those activities as they occurred mostly in places where AP/Reuters and the traditional national/international media never tread * pre-Internet, almost certainly 90% of those activities might never have happened since the people in those communities would not have expected that their activities in Peoria and Penticton would register on any sort of international demo chart and thus they would have been invisible to all but the direct participants * pre-Internet, at day 1.5 of a war that hadn't happened yet, the turnout would have been in the thousands rather than the millions and would have represented the success of organizing efforts among the league of the committed (the usual cast of fringe political parties and a few politically active unions) rather than the infinitely larger and much more diverse (and ultimately much more powerful) league of the conscious and concerned.
I think the results that Gina presented are an indication of the limitations of attempting to study phenomena which are emergent, systemic and tranformative with purely (and dare I say, narrowly) empirical methodology and tools that are meant to study phenomena that are incremental and particularistic.
Best,
Mike Gurstein